Qt: Best practice for a single instance app protection

Solution 1:

Simple solution, that does what you want. Without network dependency (as QtSingleApplication) and without any overhead.

Usage:

int main()
{
    RunGuard guard( "some_random_key" );
    if ( !guard.tryToRun() )
        return 0;

    QAppplication a(/*...*/);
    // ...
}

RunGuard.h

#ifndef RUNGUARD_H
#define RUNGUARD_H

#include <QObject>
#include <QSharedMemory>
#include <QSystemSemaphore>


class RunGuard
{

public:
    RunGuard( const QString& key );
    ~RunGuard();

    bool isAnotherRunning();
    bool tryToRun();
    void release();

private:
    const QString key;
    const QString memLockKey;
    const QString sharedmemKey;

    QSharedMemory sharedMem;
    QSystemSemaphore memLock;

    Q_DISABLE_COPY( RunGuard )
};


#endif // RUNGUARD_H

RunGuard.cpp

#include "RunGuard.h"

#include <QCryptographicHash>


namespace
{

QString generateKeyHash( const QString& key, const QString& salt )
{
    QByteArray data;

    data.append( key.toUtf8() );
    data.append( salt.toUtf8() );
    data = QCryptographicHash::hash( data, QCryptographicHash::Sha1 ).toHex();

    return data;
}

}


RunGuard::RunGuard( const QString& key )
    : key( key )
    , memLockKey( generateKeyHash( key, "_memLockKey" ) )
    , sharedmemKey( generateKeyHash( key, "_sharedmemKey" ) )
    , sharedMem( sharedmemKey )
    , memLock( memLockKey, 1 )
{
    memLock.acquire();
    {
        QSharedMemory fix( sharedmemKey );    // Fix for *nix: http://habrahabr.ru/post/173281/
        fix.attach();
    }
    memLock.release();
}

RunGuard::~RunGuard()
{
    release();
}

bool RunGuard::isAnotherRunning()
{
    if ( sharedMem.isAttached() )
        return false;

    memLock.acquire();
    const bool isRunning = sharedMem.attach();
    if ( isRunning )
        sharedMem.detach();
    memLock.release();

    return isRunning;
}

bool RunGuard::tryToRun()
{
    if ( isAnotherRunning() )   // Extra check
        return false;

    memLock.acquire();
    const bool result = sharedMem.create( sizeof( quint64 ) );
    memLock.release();
    if ( !result )
    {
        release();
        return false;
    }

    return true;
}

void RunGuard::release()
{
    memLock.acquire();
    if ( sharedMem.isAttached() )
        sharedMem.detach();
    memLock.release();
}

Solution 2:

As QtSingleApplication is relatively obsolete and not maintained anymore, I wrote a replacement, called SingleApplication.

It is based on QSharedMemory and uses a QLocalServer to notify the parent process of the new instance being spawn. It works on all platforms and is compatible supports Qt 5.

The full code and documentation are available here.

Basic Example:

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    SingleApplication app( argc, argv );

    return app.exec();
}

Advanced Example

Among other things it supports sending messages between the newly spawned instance and the primary instance, for example:

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    SingleApplication app( argc, argv, true );

    if( app.isSecondary() ) {
        app.sendMessage(  app.arguments().join(' ')).toUtf8() );
        app.exit( 0 );
    }

    return app.exec();
}

Solution 3:

You can use QSharedMemory with a specific key and check if the shared memory with that key could be created or not. If it is nor able to create it, then an instance is already run:

QSharedMemory sharedMemory;
sharedMemory.setKey("MyApplicationKey");

if (!sharedMemory.create(1))
{
    QMessageBox::warning(this, tr("Warning!"), tr("An instance of this application is running!") );

    exit(0); // Exit already a process running
}

Solution 4:

for Windows:

HANDLE g_app_mutex = NULL;

bool check_one_app_instance()
{
    g_app_mutex = ::CreateMutex(NULL, FALSE, L"8BD290769B404A7816985M9E505CF9AD64"); // this any different key as string
    if(GetLastError() == ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS)
    {
        CloseHandle(g_app_mutex);
        return false;
    }

    return true;
}